The Higher Education Policy Institute (www.hepi.ac.uk) has used
evidence from nearly 60,000 full-time undergraduate students
across the UK to answer the question of whether there is still a
single UK higher education sector.
One for all or all four one? Does the UK still have a
single higher education sector? by
compares the results from
local students studying in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern
Ireland across seven different issues:
1. value;
2. finance;
3. wellbeing;
4. accommodation;
5. pedagogy;
6. workload; and
7. regrets.
The results reveal both differences and similarities in the
student experience in each of the four parts of the UK.
-
Students from England studying in England seem to
work a little less hard than those elsewhere in the
UK. This is in contrast to much
political rhetoric on the English funding system, although it
may be partly explained by a different subject mix among
students.
-
Students from Scotland studying in Scotland have
notably different opinions on funding to local students
elsewhere in the UK, with a higher
proportion (but still under half) thinking higher education
should be free and a greater proportion believing they are
receiving ‘very good’ value for money. While this reflects the
funding regime in place in Scotland, student wellbeing is no
higher among students in Scotland than elsewhere.
-
Welsh students studying in Wales are more positive
about the staff who teach them than those elsewhere in the UK
– for example, 60% of local students
in Wales say all or a majority of their teaching staff motivate
them to do their best work, compared to 52% in England, 51% in
Scotland and 53% in Northern Ireland. Although the differences
are sometimes modest, local students in Wales score their staff
more highly across a range of positive attributes.
-
Students from Northern Ireland studying in Northern
Ireland provide more positive responses on all four wellbeing
questions than those elsewhere in the
UK, confirming other evidence
suggesting more positive wellbeing in Northern Ireland.
However, as Northern Ireland has just three universities
(Queen’s, Ulster and the Open University) and two university
colleges, the number of respondents from Northern Ireland is
lower than for the other parts of the UK.
, Director of HEPI and the
author of the report, said:
‘Students in England seem to work less hard than those
elsewhere in the UK. Students in Scotland have more positive
perceptions about the value of their course and are more likely
to believe higher education should be free. Meanwhile, students
in Wales tend to think more positively about their academics and
students in Northern Ireland are more content, with higher levels
of wellbeing.
‘Many of our results are surprising. Policymakers in
England have often tried to portray high tuition fees as offering
more student choice and a better student experience. Policymakers
in other parts of the UK have tended to regard lower student
debts as a way to improve student wellbeing. Both these claims
are pooh-poohed by the results from students themselves.
‘Nonetheless, it is easy to exaggerate the scale of any
differences. The most important finding overall is that any
differences in the student experience in different parts of the
UK are fairly modest.
‘Despite increasing devolution and increasingly divergent
policies, there is still more that unites higher education
institutions across the UK than divides them. The current
Covid-19 crisis is bringing this home, as higher education
institutions across the UK are all facing the same new
challenges.’
For further information, please contact on 07730 718247
/ n.hillman@hepi.ac.uk.
Notes for Editors
-
The Higher Education Policy Institute was established in
2002 to help shape the higher education debate with evidence.
It is the UK’s only independent think tank devoted to higher
education. HEPI is a non-partisan charity funded by higher
education institutions and other organisations that wish to see
a vibrant policy debate.
-
The dataset used in the report is freely available from
HEPI.
-
The fieldwork for this report and most of the writing up
were completed before the current Covid-19 crisis. HEPI is
continuing to produce written reports and blogs, including on
the crisis itself, but our programme of events is temporarily
on hold and all of the HEPI team are working from home, in line
with official advice.